U.S. gay marriage pioneer Edith Windsor
dies at 88
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[September 13, 2017]
By Joseph Ax
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Edith Windsor, the New
York woman whose successful challenge to a federal law that defined
marriage as between one man and one woman helped pave the way for gay
marriage nationwide, died on Tuesday at age 88.
Her passing was announced by her wife, Judith Kasen-Windsor, and lawyer
Roberta Kaplan, who did not offer a cause of death.
The 2013 U.S. Supreme Court ruling in United States v. Windsor, which
struck down the core of the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act, was credited
with laying the groundwork for the court's 2015 ruling in another case
that legalized same-sex marriage.
"I lost my beloved spouse Edie, and the world lost a tiny but tough as
nails fighter for freedom, justice and equality. Edie was the light of
my life," said Kasen-Windsor, who married Windsor last year.
In a statement, former President Barack Obama said he spoke with Windsor
a few days ago and told her again how important her work had been to the
country.
"America's long journey towards equality has been guided by countless
small acts of persistence, and fueled by the stubborn willingness of
quiet heroes to speak out for what's right," he said. "Few were as small
in stature as Edie Windsor – and few made as big a difference to
America."
The case, which made Windsor a revered figure in the modern gay rights
movement, originally stemmed from a tax dispute. Windsor, a former IBM
consultant known as "Edie," and Thea Spyer, a psychologist, met in the
1960s in a New York restaurant and spent four decades engaged to be
married before they finally tied the knot in Canada in 2007.
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Edith Windsor (C), an 83-year-old woman who says the Defense of
Marriage Act discriminates against gay couples in violation of the
U.S. Constitution, speaks to the media during a news conference in
New York, U.S. on October 18, 2012. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz/File Photo
Spyer died in 2009. Under the Defense of Marriage Act, same-sex
marriages were not federally recognized, depriving Windsor of an
estate-tax break afforded to heterosexual surviving spouses.
The Supreme Court's Windsor decision applied to gay marriages only
in the 13 states that permitted them at the time. In the ensuing
months, the central reasoning of the case was cited by courts in
several states that found gay marriage bans unlawful.
In 2015, the Supreme Court declared that same-sex marriage was
protected by the Constitution.
"It's an accident of history that put me here," Windsor said after
she won her case. "If Thea had been Theo," everything would have
been different, she added.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Writing by Will Dunham; Editing by Matthew
Lewis and Peter Cooney)
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